เงินฟรี แจกเงินฟรีไม่ต้องฝาก

My first book! Learn about Psychology’s most famous studies as well as recent ones that are fun and provide insight on human psychology. Step-by-step instructions on how to carry out 50 psychology studies.

The Premiere Psychology Podcast since 2007.

Over?17 million?downloads

Over?5,000 downloads a day

MERLOT award winner, covered in the APA?Monitor, the History Channel?and NPR.

37 Comments on “”

Michael,
I’ve been a devoted listener for years & love your program. I’m sure that doesn’t mean much since your show has gotten so popular & you get this all the time but your show is brilliant & special to me. It’s literally the only podcast I’ve ever listened to more than 2 episodes of– & I’ve listened to them all, some of them multiple times!
Anyway, I wanted to know if you might ever do an episode about eating disorders. I’m a current residential patient at McCallum Place in St. Louis & think it might be an interesting topic. Obviously I’m biased because it’s relevant to me, but I think other listeners may benefit from it, too. I know that’s a vague thing to say: “do an episode on EDs”, but maybe something like the mental changes that happen to a person with an eating disorder (mood irregularities, how different a personality can radically change, weak central coherence & the rumination that occurs in a person suffering from an ED) or I’m not sure… you could probably come up with ideas of things to talk about ??

I’m not sure if you would care to do that at all & it’s understandable if you don’t; it’s a scary topic, but an interesting one, psychologically speaking (in my opinion).

Thanks for your show. & if you took the time to read all of this I appreciate it.

Dear Michel,
I am beginning a PhD and I need to develop several experiments for children. In general, experiments will have to show two images in the screen for some milliseconds (about 800ms) and then give the option to choose one of the two images by keyboard (or mouse) depending on a question. The reaction time is very important to be recorded. All the data has to be recorded in xls or csv for my posterior analysis.
I would like not have to program if it is possible. Could you please give me any advice on which platform or web or software may I use to do these kinf of experiments? Could be for example ZebraZapps or something better or easier or whatever… ?
Thank you so much, I really appreciate your advice,
Nuria

Sounds like an interesting experiment. Well, I recently found out about a new site that let’s you conduct experiments. It’s called Testable. It looks like it might work for your needs. Check it out. I’ve been thinking about talking about it in an upcoming episode. If you use it let me know how it goes.

Thank you so much Michael,
I will read very carefully the information in http://www.testable.org and if I decide to use it for my experiments I will let you know how it goes.
I’m very grateful for your information.
Nuria

Glad to hear it. I was thinking of contacting the developer of Testable and see if he would do a demo for the show. I’ll see if I can make that happen. It’s hard to find good (affordable) online research software.

Michael, your show is an absolute joy. I feel incredibly lucky to have found it. I am a big fan of Lev Vygotsky–would you be able to discuss his work? Especially his views on consciousness and internal word meaning.

I got to your site via a YouTube video on Skinner. I down loaded too fast. I’m about to take CSET and was in the process of consuming and processing Erikson, Gardner, Pavlov, Skinner, Vegotsky, Kohlberg, Piaget, Sternberg, Ainsworth, all at once. I didn’t find videos on other theorists. It would be a good set of li

After a brief exposure to your skills as a moderator of interesting pod casts I have come to feel more comfortable is my particular affliction as it were. Being a covert cross dresser. I am male but have a penchant for lingerie items that I wear and seek release.

Hello! I stumbled across your podcast and started listening starting at the first episode. I found it very interesting and kept listening for the next few hours. I sat down with my son to watch The Incredibles, and since I’ve seen it hundreds of times, I put my ear buds in and coincidentally turned on episode 9, “how do you really raise self esteem?” And you started talking about the movie I was watching. Freaky!

yes this is the type of question coming up on past papers
Outline how BOTH the methods of investigation and the subject matter of Psychology have changed from its early experimental beginnings in Leipzig to the modern cognitive approaches of the 20th and 21st centuries

I see. Well, that’s a rather far-reaching question but I don’t think you would need to memorize the timeline to answer it. Here are a few thoughts. Regarding the methods of investigation: early researchers in Psychology used a method called “introspection” to investigated what was going on in people’s heads. It’s an unreliable method in which people reflected on their experiences and spoke about them. Freud of course, only used case studies of his patients and tried from these studies to apply his findings to others. This is another method with significant weaknesses. Today, researchers use extensive tests (such as the MMPI and the Big 5 personality inventory) to better understand personality. Also, we conduct more tightly controlled studies that employ experimental and comparison groups rather than just investigations using a few or one person.

As for the subject matter, well we’ve moved from trying to study a vague term like “consciousness” to more specific ideas such as Learned Helplessness (examining the words people use to explain events and whether those words indicate a sense of futility about being able to change the course of one’s life) and we’re now very focused on using brain scanning techniques like the MRI and PET scans to find out exactly which parts of the brain are active when we think about things.

I haven’t done another video with additional mnemonics, but I did create additional mnemonics (more brain parts plus parts of the neuron, types of brain scans and several neurotransmitters) and put them into an app called Brain Mnemonics. Here’s the link to that app (it helps support the podcast): Brain?Mnemonic?s for iOS, Brain?Mnemonic?s for Android, and Brain?Mnemonic?s PDF.

Hello! Recently subscribed to your podcast and just wanted to say hello! And express how I really enjoy your topics and I enjoy the unconventional way of learning you provide. I appreciate the real life practical applications you bring up and I personally feel my applied knowledge about said topics really have improved. Have a great week! -Stef

Just came across your podcast, and I really enjoy it. I feel as if the other psychology podcasts I followed were a bit too self-help and shammy for me, but not yours! Also, your voice and mannerisms are strangely similar to Dan Carlin, who is another podcast I listen to. Sometimes I can’t tell the difference between you two! haha.

Thanks Christopher. Glad you like the show. Yes, I try to avoid self-help stuff. That is what most people associate with psychology, but the first is so much bigger than that. Glad you like the voice as well. I’ve never heard of Dan Carlin before but I’m listening to him now in another tab on my browser. Interesting podcast!

What I would love, and perhaps the listeners might enjoy an intro to the mind’s ability to inhibit/allow the body to achieve great things. Something which I have come across in the last few days which is a great example being this https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YR9Nvs5Eohg. The video is of a man learning how to perform a back flip (gross motor skill).

Hope you continue to have as much joy creating these podcasts as I do listening to them.

Hi Michael I have only watched a couple of your podcasts , I will watch more they were fascinating. My quest is to teach one of my preschool students all 26 letters in the alphabet, I believe she has a form of dyslexia. Please give me practical tips if you have time. Thank you! Adrienne Marcus

Michael, I am studying for the EPPP exam. I absolutely love your learning with mnemonics and have been able to not only memorize but retain things like the different stages of Kohler’s Morality. Do you have any mnemonic learning tools for I/O psychology – theories of leadership, motivation, etc. I cannot seem to keep these things in my head.
Thank you,
Christine

Thank you Christine for your comment. Interesting idea – mnemonics for I/O psychology. I hadn’t really thought about that. Let me give this some thought. I don’t see why not. You’re taking a course in I/O I take it?

I’m a counselor in training (as a second career) and I find your podcast informative and entertaining. I really had to laugh at the episode with the study on Hedonic Adjustment. I wouldn’t have qualified as a participant since I eat popcorn with chopsticks on a regular basis. My first career was in theatrical costuming. The hours can be long and snacks are important, but fine silk fabrics and buttery popcorn don’t mix! One of my supervisors had solved this problem by eating popcorn with chopsticks so the oils from the popcorn never got on her hands or the fabric, and trained me to do so as well. Now it just makes sense. I have since exposed my classmates to this technique, some of whom think it is a great idea.